This is a dark country. They kill to silence dissenters.
Quote, "Were War Critic Soldiers Killed To Send Message?

Two soldiers who wrote op-ed that contradicted Patraeus report
die in strange accident, while another is shot in the head in
case that bears chilling resemblance to Pat Tillman story

September 14, 2007
Paul Joseph Watson

The mother of a soldier who died in an apparent vehicle accident
shortly after writing a New York Times op-ed critical of the war
in Iraq is demanding to know the truth about what happened to
her son, while another author of the piece was also shot in the
head in a case that bears a sinister resemblance to the murder
of Pat Tillman.

Like Tillman, 28-year-old Sergeant Omar Mora enlisted shortly
after 9/11 in the belief that he was fighting to protect his
country from terrorists.

However, after the invasion of Iraq Mora became increasingly
skeptical of the true agenda behind the war and in August he,
along with six other active duty soldiers of the 82nd Airborne
Division, wrote a stinging New York Times op-ed that slammed the
occupation as "flawed," "absurd," and concluded that the
sentiment of the Iraqi people renders the ultimate withdrawal of
American troops inevitable.

The op-ed directly contradicts the foundation of the Patraeus
report and characterizes the occupation as doomed to failure if
the Bush administration's current policy is continued.

Just over three weeks after the op-ed was published, two of its
authors, Mora and Sgt. Yance T. Gray, were killed in an apparent
vehicle accident when their truck veered off an elevated highway
in western Baghdad and fell about 30 feet, the military said.

Was this a simple accident or another Pat Tillman style
cover-up? Was a message being sent to other soldiers who are
considering speaking out against the war that dissent has deadly
consequences?

Even if we are to dismiss the truck wreck as nothing more than
an accident, another factor that has received next to no press
attention should send red flags up for everyone.

A third author of the letter was also shot in the head in a
separate incident during the time when the op-ed was being
written. Though Staff Sgt. Jeremy Murphy survived and is
expected to make a full recovery, the fact that three of the
seven authors of the op-ed were either killed or received
life-threatening injuries shortly before and after the
publication of the piece is highly suspicious.

Sergeant Mora's mother certainly has questions - and is now
demanding the Army provide a full account of the circumstances
that led to her son's death.

After the op-ed was published Mora became depressed and wanted
to return home. "He told me, 'Mama, I am tired, I am so tired. I
want to come home,' " his mother, Olga Capetillo, recalled of a
recent phone conversation," reports the Houston Chronicle .

As we reported in July , the revelation of astounding new
details surrounding the death of Pat Tillman clearly indicated
that top brass decided to execute the former pro football star
in cold blood to prevent him from returning home and becoming an
anti-war icon.

Medical examiners concluded that the Army Ranger was shot with
an M-16 three times in the head from a mere 10 yards away. The
close proximity of the bullet holes raised suspicions that foul
play was involved but attempts to launch a proper investigation
were stymied by higher-ups and a cover-up ensued.